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<blockquote data-quote="dredre04" data-source="post: 185950" data-attributes="member: 10759"><p>I watched the video when the the coil is described and he talks about using a very thin wire is an AWG60 wire !. Do you have any idea how thin that copper wire is? It is not possible to handle it by hand. the thickness of the thread speaks of it at 3:40. With that wire diameter, to obtain about 1000Ohm of impedance, 9.2 feet of wire are enough divided on the 4 coils so each coil needs 2.3 feet of wire each. So the amount of wire would be plausible with the size of the device but the problem of the wire diameter being infinitesimal remains. I believe, however, that this impedance value was necessary to use the German transistor that drove very little current. I don't know if using a different transistor that allows you to drive more milliamps you can use a thicker wire. But be careful because the size of the reel would get bigger. But does it have to be a germanium transistor? Let us remember that at that time germanium was preferable in HF but somewhere in the video it seems to me that soon it says that it is also possible to use silicon transistors.</p><p></p><p><a href="https://youtu.be/M4D9KmB25z4?t=13197" target="_blank">Watch here</a></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="dredre04, post: 185950, member: 10759"] I watched the video when the the coil is described and he talks about using a very thin wire is an AWG60 wire !. Do you have any idea how thin that copper wire is? It is not possible to handle it by hand. the thickness of the thread speaks of it at 3:40. With that wire diameter, to obtain about 1000Ohm of impedance, 9.2 feet of wire are enough divided on the 4 coils so each coil needs 2.3 feet of wire each. So the amount of wire would be plausible with the size of the device but the problem of the wire diameter being infinitesimal remains. I believe, however, that this impedance value was necessary to use the German transistor that drove very little current. I don't know if using a different transistor that allows you to drive more milliamps you can use a thicker wire. But be careful because the size of the reel would get bigger. But does it have to be a germanium transistor? Let us remember that at that time germanium was preferable in HF but somewhere in the video it seems to me that soon it says that it is also possible to use silicon transistors. [URL='https://youtu.be/M4D9KmB25z4?t=13197']Watch here[/URL] [/QUOTE]
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